'Party Monster' Michael Alig On Angel Melendez Murder YouTube


Angel Melendez Crime Scene

Prosecutors said Mr. Alig, who is 30 years old, killed Mr. Melendez during an argument about money inside Mr. Alig's apartment on West 43d Street in early March. According to law enforcement.


Angel Melendez and Michael Alig

Michael Alig, the former king of the Club Kids, several times removed from the past.. since he pleaded guilty to killing Andre Melendez — a fellow club kid known as Angel — in a heroin.


Michael Alig Angel Melendez

"Club Kid Killer" Michael Alig died from an accidental overdose of various hard drugs. The infamous promoter's cause of death was acute intoxication by fentanyl, acetylfentanyl, heroin and.


Pin on disco bloodbath

Alig in Club Kid days Everett Collection. The seemingly all-for-fun facade of the Club Kid scene turned irrevocably dark with the March 1996 disappearance of Andre "Angel" Melendez, a.


“Disco Bloodbath” Michael Alig and the Death of Angel Melendez Part 2 YouTube

Michael had known Angel, who was living in Queens, New York, and had stayed over at Michael's place in the past. By 1996, Michael was a popular figure in the club scene with many connections. Sometime in March that year, he had learned about a potential DEA bust to arrest drug dealers.


Inside Club Kid life and tragic death of Daniel Auster

He spoke with 1010 WINS about the death of drug dealer Andre "Angel" Melendez in March 1996, and its aftermath in his life. Alig, 49, was part of a decadent 1990s party scene characterized by wild.


Beneath the Bebop Moon... Michael alig, Angel melendez, Club kids

Michael Alig in 2015. Alig got into an argument with Melendez and his friend Robert (Freeze) Riggs bashed Melendez over the head. The duo chopped up the body in a bathtub and threw the.


James St. James and Michael Alig in the 1990s Angel Melendez, Michael Alig, Amanda Lepore, Nobel

Authorities say "club kid" killer Michael Alig has died of a suspected drug overdose in New York City at age 54. 1997 for killing Andre "Angel" Melendez. Alig admitted that he and.


Michael Alig

Andre Melendez [2] (May 1, 1971 - March 17, 1996) was a member of the Club Kids and purported drug dealer who lived and worked in New York City. He was killed by Michael Alig and Robert "Freeze" Riggs on March 17, 1996. His life and death have inspired several pieces of media, including books, films, music, and television. [3] [4] [5] [6] Life


Michael Alig Interview Magazine

Michael Alig, the New York "party monster" who served 17 years in prison for murder, reportedly died of a heroin overdose in his Manhattan apartment on Friday night. Alig was 54. Alig was.


Club Kid killer relives bloody crime

In the 90s he was king of the New York club kids, but it all came crashing down when he was arrested for the grisly murder of Angel Melendez. After 17 years.


Walt Cassidy (WaltPaper) on New York Club Kids "New York Club Kids" Club kids, Michael alig

The dead man, Angel Melendez. On Christmas Day, the 54-year-old died of a suspected accidental heroin overdose at the apartment he shared with his boyfriend in the Washington Heights neighbourhood.


Musto & Alig Angel Melendez, Michael Alig, Leigh Bowery, Amanda Lepore, City Club, After

Michael Alig Dead at 54 From Alleged Heroin Overdose (Sub)Culture Michael Alig, Infamous 'Club Kid Killer,' Dead at 54 The notorious party promoter, who served 17 years in prison for.


Notorious Kids killer' Michael Alig, 54, dies of suspected heroin overdose

New York party promoter Michael Alig was released last week after serving 17 years in jail. The self-proclaimed "King of The Club Kids" infamously slayed his drug-dealer friend, Angel.


Michael Alig Angel Melendez

Michael Alig (April 29, 1966 - December 24, 2020) was an American club promoter and artist who was convicted of felony manslaughter. He was one of the ringleaders of the Club Kids, a group of young New York City clubgoers who became a cultural phenomenon in the late 1980s and early 1990s. [1]


Michael Alig How I Did It

Michael Alig was the darling of the New York club scene, a magnet for misfits and a lightning rod for conservative outrage.